4Academic Medical Centre, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

5Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN USA

6Hospital Universitario Madrid, Sanchinarro, Spain

7Tufts Medical Center, Boston, MA USA

8Sheba Hospital, Tel Aviv, Israel

Introduction

There are 300 million obese in the world population, many of whom are in need of a medical device that will afford them significantly better results than current weight loss drugs and commercial weight loss systems. While severe technical failures led to the removal of weight loss balloons from the US market in 1985, the next generation intragastric balloons (IGBs) were totally redesigned and have been successfully used for the last 17 years outside of the USA. The published results reveal an average weight loss of 12–15 kg over 6 months [1–16]. Nevertheless, current generation IGBs have limitations; they have been associated with (1) deflation and bowel obstruction, (2) loss of effect after 2 to 3 months, (3) limitation to a 6-month implantation time, (4) significant nausea, vomiting, and discomfort in the early implantation period, necessitating balloon extraction in 4–7% of patients [1, 2], (5) balloon extraction requiring purchase of a dedicated tool, and (6) difficulty adjusting volume after implantation—technically, the Allergan balloon can be adjusted, but it is time consuming, tedious, impractical, and has essentially not been done for the last 17 years. The Endogast device is an air-filled balloon that is adjustable; however, it requires percutaneous anchoring to the abdominal wall, tunneling of the inflation tube subcutaneously by a surgeon, and reports a 12.2% subcutaneous infection rate [17].

The introduction of the Spatz Adjustable Balloon system (ABS) offers features that address these limitations. The aim of this first-in-man study is to report early safety and effectiveness results, and to encourage discussions as to how to best utilize this new generation IGB for chronic endoscopic weight loss management.

Patients and Methods

Following Ethics committee approval at the University Hospital in Ostrava, Czech Republic, a 6-month first-in-man implantation study was undertaken in accordance with the ethical standards of the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2000. Patients were enrolled between October 2009 and March 2010. The primary endpoint was the absence of bowel obstruction, perforation, or significant hemorrhage. Additionally, weight loss at 12, 24, and 52 weeks and percent of excess weight loss (% EWL) were also assessed.

The Spatz ABS (Spatz FGIA, Inc., NY, USA) was used in 18 patients, who were selected according to criteria used by currently CE Marked IGBs. Inclusion criteria included BMI > 27 and those individuals in need of preoperative weight loss. Exclusion criteria were similar to the currently approved IGBs. Informed consent was obtained from all patients. Pre-implantation evaluation by a psychologist, dietician, and an experienced IGB endoscopist identified 18 patients appropriate for implantation. A binge eating scale was used to identify and exclude potential binge eaters. During the course of the study, the Ethics Committee approved extension of the implantation period to 12 months.

The Spatz ABS is composed of a silicone balloon that is mounted on a catheter on one surface. The catheter exits the balloon and has two loops that are perpendicular to each other, the larger of which has a metal chain that allows straightening of the curve, yet confers non-crushability (see Fig. 1). This non-collapsible loop maintains its 7-cm diameter in the gastric lumen and is meant to prevent or delay a deflated balloon from passing through the pylorus and duodenum and evade endoscopic extraction. A highly visible white valve is connected to a stretchable inflation tube that exits the catheter. The stretchable inflation tube can be pulled out of the stomach with a snare, enabling balloon volume adjustability, while the balloon remains in the stomach. A highly visible blue clasp at the end of the catheter allows easy extraction with a standard polypectomy snare. Calibrations on the pusher identify device position during the implantation procedure. The device is straightened with a guidewire and is inserted similar to the passage of an oro-gastric tube, with the removal of the guidewire and pusher once the device passes the gastro-esophageal junction. Generation 1 device was implanted in the first five patients (Figs. 1 and 2). Generation 2 device added a stabilizer band which maintained the larger loop in a closed position (Figs. 3 and 4). Thirteen patients were implanted with Generation 2 device. Balloons were deflated via the inflation valve or via needle catheter puncture, at the investigator’s discretion. Devices were extracted with a standard polypectomy snare.

Generation 2

Eighteen patients (15 female, three male) with a mean BMI of 37.3 (range 29.4–53.2), a mean weight of 108.8 kg (range 89–163), a mean excess weight of 46.3 kg (range 26.8–73.6), and a mean age of 39 (range 21–57) were implanted with the Spatz ABS. Patients were followed up by a dietician and a gastroenterologist on a regular basis (weeks 1, 6, 12, 18, 24, 30, 36, 42, 52, and 60 with the principal investigator and/or dietician). The first five patients were implanted with Generation 1 device. After three of the first five patients had distal catheter tip migration into the duodenum, a stabilizer band was created to keep the large loop of the catheter closed. The next 13 patients were implanted with the Generation 2 device. None had distal catheter tip migration into the duodenum. One patient had the small loop migrate into the duodenum on day 14 which was pulled back into the stomach endoscopically, and has not recurred.

The Spatz ABS was implanted following a standard endoscopy under the sedation of an anesthesiologist. The first patient underwent general anesthesia, while the subsequent patients underwent conscious sedation using a narcotic, and midazolam, with or without propofol, at the anesthesiologist’s discretion. The Spatz ABS was initially inflated with 400 ml of sterile normal saline, with the exception of three patients that were inflated with 350, 475, and 500 ml, respectively. The initial protocol called for externalizing the inflation tube valve by leaving the extension tube out of the mouth and securing to the side of the mouth. The idea was to inflate or deflate the balloon 4 h after the procedure according to patient symptoms—hence, the three different volumes (350, 375, and 500). The first three patients experienced discomfort when the valve was lowered back down the throat—the procedure was discontinued and the protocol was adjusted accordingly. The first five patients were observed overnight in the hospital, while the remaining patients were discharged on the day of the procedure. All patients were treated with Pantoprazole 40 mg BID for 30 days followed by 40 mg daily for the remainder of the implantation period. Anti-emetics and analgesics were prescribed for the first 3 days post-implantation. All patients were discharged on clear liquid diet for 3 days, followed by a 1,000-kcal diet.

Results

The primary endpoint was met successfully by not having a single patient with a bowel obstruction, perforation, or significant hemorrhage. There were no deaths, and a single SAE (hospitalization) which was determined by the investigator to be unrelated to the IGB (patient no. 9 took double dose NSAID × 14 days).

Implantation times varied from 20 to 60 min on the first five patients due to a floppy guidewire. Subsequent implantation times in the remaining 13 patients ranged from 8 to 15 min.

Weight loss results are displayed in Table 1. Mean weight loss at 12 weeks was 11.1 kg with a 26% EWL. Mean weight loss at 24 weeks was 15.7 kg with a 36% EWL. Mean weight loss at 36 weeks was 20.4 kg with a 40.4% EWL. Mean weight loss at 52 weeks was 24.4 kg with a 48.8% EWL. Therefore, we also demonstrated that with the Spatz adjustable balloon, patients safely continue to lose weight beyond 6 months.

Follow-Up Visit Compliance

Follow-up visits with dietician and behavior modification experts have been shown to correlate with successful outcome [15]. We have defined successful outcome to be >25% EWL. Table 2 shows the direct correlation.

Adjustments

The first adjustment was performed without endoscopic observation. This led to inflation tube kinking and tube rupture. The balloon was removed without any adverse event. The following 16 adjustments were performed successfully (Table 3). Six patients underwent downward adjustments with a mean volume of 117 ml. Intolerance was alleviated, and they continued to lose weight, with a mean additional weight loss of 4.6 kg after the adjustment. The other ten patients were adjusted upward for weight loss plateau, with a mean addition of 188 ml. Their mean additional weight loss following adjustment was 7 kg.

Patients experienced varying degrees of nausea, vomiting, and abdominal pain after implantation. Our data does not suggest any correlation between degree of post-implantation symptoms and successful outcome (defined as >25% EWL). See Table 5.

Symptoms after adjustments were much lighter and better tolerated. See Table 6.

Seven of the 18 balloons (39%) were removed during the course of the study, as provided in detail in Table 7.

Patient no. 5 was noted to have moderate erosive gastritis at initial endoscopy, which, at the time was not deemed a contraindication to the implantation. Nausea and pain recurred at 6 weeks after implantation necessitating device removal. At explantation, the erosive gastritis had not healed in spite of Pantoprazole 40 mg BID, and Helicobacter pylori infection was documented. Follow-up endoscopy 2 months later, after treatment for H. pylori infection, revealed complete healing of the gastritis.

Patient no. 3 had an adjustment for diminished weight loss. The inflation was performed without re-introducing the endoscope to observe for inflation tube kinking. The tube was kinked and burst, requiring balloon extraction. The patient tolerated the procedure without clinical event.

Patient no. 6 reported to the principal investigator a sensation of balloon deflation for 1 month. Endoscopy revealed a completely deflated balloon with the anchor in the stomach. The balloon was removed without clinical event.

Patient no. 13 had a Mallory–Weiss tear several days after an adjustment. The device was removed, and the patient was sent home the same day. The patient’s hemoglobin was stable, and no additional clinical events were noted.

Patient no. 10 had a leak after her valve broke during her third adjustment procedure. The valve remained intact, connected to the balloon, but allowed a slow leak. The device was removed, and the patient was sent home the same day. The valve has two parts which were glued together. The two parts of the valve are now secured using heat welding.

Patient no. 9 took 2 weeks of Piroxicam 20 mg daily plus three to four doses of Ibuprofen daily every day for low back pain. She then presented with a gastric perforation. At laparotomy, a NSAID-induced perforating gastric ulcer was oversewn. The device was noted to be intact, and the perforation was deemed to be a SAE from NSAID overdose. The patient was discharged and did well postoperatively.

The first three cases took 20–60 min to implant due to a floppy guidewire. After substituting a stiffer guidewire, the remaining implantations took 8 to 15 min. Three patients with Generation 1 device (without the stabilizer band) had migration of the distal catheter into the duodenum. None with Generation 2 device had distal catheter migration. One patient with Generation 2 device (with stabilizer band) had passage of the small loop of the catheter into the duodenum. All four patients had the catheter pulled back to its normal position in the stomach and did not have a recurrence over the ensuing 20 or more weeks.

Patient no. 3 passed a sheared catheter in her bowel movement uneventfully. The chain end cut through the wall of the catheter and caused a shearing of the catheter. The balloon remained intact in her stomach and was subsequently removed uneventfully. The patient experienced upper abdominal discomfort intermittently over a 2-day period, prior to passage of the catheter. During the extraction procedure of patient no. 11, a deep laceration was noted in the proximal esophagus. The chain-end had sheared through the wall of the catheter (similar to patient no. 3) and scratched the esophagus during extraction. Barium swallow did not show an extravasation or perforation, but the surgeon elected to repair it surgically through a neck incision. She was discharged from the hospital 1 week later, without dysphagia.

Balloons were extracted by ensnaring the blue clasp with a polypectomy snare. During the course of this study, CE Mark was granted based on pre-clinical studies, literature review, technical file review, and preliminary results of this study. All engineering enhancements have been documented, verified, and validated according to the medical directive. As a result of the adverse events, several changes were made. (1) The IFU will stipulate “any erosive gastritis” as a contraindication. (2) A stretchable stabilizer band that spans the diameter of the large loop of the catheter was added. This keeps the catheter loop closed in the deployed position and resists opening of the loop, with the exception of insertion and extraction. (3) The metal chain will be curved and will have atraumatic ends surrounded by silicone glue to prevent catheter shearing. The addition of the stabilizer band also prevents catheter shear by preventing repetitive opening and closing of the loop. The catheter wall has now been reinforced with a strain relief band, as well. The catheter shear occurred on the radio-opaque stripe on the catheter wall—its weakest point. The “stripe” will be eliminated since the metal chain makes the “stripe” superfluous. (4) To address the small loop migration into the duodenum, a second chain and stabilizer band were added to the smaller loop in a post-market release. This addition caused difficulty in guidewire release during insertion. Since the migration of the small loop occurred in only one of 18 patients in our study (without recurrence) and caused minor nausea and vomiting, the second chain and stabilizer band have thus been removed.

Discussion

Currently marketed IGBs, in their varying embodiments, are a static technology. The choice of balloon volume is made at the time of implantation—and is not easily changed. There is no way to gauge what size balloon is best for a specific patient, as the threshold for nausea vomiting and/or abdominal pain are not measurable or predictable. The loss of IGB efficacy after 3 months has been demonstrated convincingly in many studies [3, 16, 18–22] and is considered a major drawback. This has led researchers to evaluate placement of a second balloon 1 month after removal of the first balloon. In a recent study, Lopez-Nava reported an additional drop of 2.6 points of BMI, following consecutive balloon placements in 112 patients [23]. In a similar study of consecutive BIB balloons, Genco reported a further drop of 3.9 points of BMI after the second balloon [24]. This upward adjustment was enacted using two consecutive “static” balloons—requiring two balloons and four endoscopic procedures. An adjustable balloon, on the other hand, offers dynamic bariatric therapy—requiring one balloon and three endoscopic procedures. Our study has shown the safety and efficacy of an adjustable balloon. Weight loss plateaus were treated with volume additions. Intolerance was successfully managed with a downward adjustment—patients regained their comfort, yet continued to lose weight. Both the downward and upward adjustments resulted in significant (4.6 and 8.1 kg, respectively) weight loss following the adjustment.

IGBs carry a risk of migration of the deflated balloon and bowel obstruction. The largest BIB series reported 19 incidents of early gastric/duodenal obstruction. Eight occurred in partially deflated balloons which entered and blocked the pylorus. The other 11 obstructions occurred with normally inflated balloons and could not be explained by the authors [25]. We have encountered only one episode of spontaneous balloon deflation in one of our early implantations. The one episode of balloon deflation was rectified by additional adhesive between the catheter and the balloon edge. Our incidents of duodenal migration of our distal catheter tip in our first generation device have prompted the addition of the stabilizer band, which appears to have successfully prevented distal catheter tip migration. The addition of a stretchable stabilizer band that “closes the loop” of the “anchor” and exerts a force against the straightening of the “anchor” seems to prevent entrance into the duodenum. The combination of the internal chain (prevents collapse of the loop) and the stabilizer band (prevents opening of the loop) maintain the “anchor” in a 7-cm diameter circle that hampers device migration in the event of balloon deflation—yet allows straightening for insertion and extraction.

Two critical reviews of IGBs have been reported in the literature, with similar overall positive results [1, 2]. IGBs are an established successful weight loss therapy with 5,000 patients reported in the literature over the last 17 years [3–16]. Only a handful of studies report negative or equivocal results [26–28].Two randomized controlled trials (RCT) with crossover have been published [7, 29]. The Mathus-Vliegen study found no difference in weight loss between sham and BIB groups in the first 13 weeks of the study. However, after crossover, the BIB group lost 4.9 kg more than the sham group [29]. In contrast, the Genco RCT with crossover study did show a 12 kg greater weight loss for the BIB over the sham group in the first half of the study. After crossover, again, the BIB group lost 7 kg more than the sham group [7]. The mechanism of action for weight loss with the IGB may be multifactorial. Aside from the obvious space occupying effect of IGBs, Ghrelin levels (an appetite enhancing hormone discovered in the stomach) have been documented to decrease during balloon implantation in one study [4] and uncorrelated in another study [26]. Prolonged gastric emptying has also been demonstrated during IGB implantation [4].

Over 100,000 IGBs have been implanted worldwide, with an impressive safety record and reproducible efficacy. Nonetheless, there remain issues and risks with current IGB technology.

Early nausea has been reported in every published BIB study. In one review, early balloon removal was reported in 143 out of 3,442 patients (4.2%) in 13 of the articles reviewed [2]. In another review, early balloon removal was noted in 6.7%, but if the 2,515 patients in the Genco study were added then these numbers are halved [1]. Given the lack of volume adjustability in current IGBs, endoscopists aim for the highest tolerated balloon volume, at the risk of greater nausea and vomiting and early balloon removal. The correct volume is an unknown for each patient. An adjustable balloon, however, can start with a smaller volume balloon with the expectation of increasing volume after two to 3 months (or when weight loss diminishes), offering a more comfortable early period. Although we only report our first 18 patients, their early period has been comfortable, with two of our patients (patient nos. 11 and 14) requesting downward adjustment to combat intolerance. They remained in the study and continued to lose weight. Only an adjustable balloon can offer this advantage.

The 2008 Mathus-Vliegen review reported a 3.3–8% balloon deflation rate within 6 months. She found that 25% of the deflated balloons remained in the gastric lumen; 71% passed harmlessly in the stool and 4% required surgery to alleviate bowel obstruction [1]. It is widely accepted and intuitively reasonable to assume that deflation rates increase with longer acid exposure. Intestinal obstruction has been reported with deflated balloons [5, 6, 9, 25, 30–32], and as such IGB removal at 6 months is mandated. The Spatz balloon “anchor” enhances endoscopic retrieval of a deflated balloon and will diminish the risk of bowel obstruction. This in turn has allowed a longer 6-month implantation, granted by the CE Mark. Only one of our patients had a balloon leak. The patient reported this to us 1 month after sensing the deflation. Upon balloon retrieval, the anchor was noted sitting in the gastric antrum with the deflated balloon attached. Although it is only one episode, it does confirm the anchor function. Whereas our early generation device had distal catheter entry into the pylorus in three of five patients, it did not occur in the 13 patients that had a stabilizer band added in the Generation 2 device. If a Spatz balloon does deflate, and even if there is catheter entry into the pylorus, migration of the device and deflated balloon would be significantly hampered by the catheter, internal chain, and stabilizer band—allowing time for endoscopic retrieval. Deflation of the Allergan intragastric balloons have reported a 4% chance of bowel obstruction [1]—it cannot be studied, but it has been suggested that deflated balloons leave the stomach within hours and leave a very short window of opportunity for endoscopic retrieval. There is no safeguard for preventing migration—other than methylene blue causing a change in urine color. The Spatz balloon is the first intragastric balloon to attempt a mechanical means to prevent balloon migration.

Weight loss maintenance after balloon extraction has been reported with mixed results [6, 12, 27, 28, 33]. One year after IGB removal, patients regained 75% [27], 41% [12], and 28% [28] of their lost weight. Crea reported a regain of three points of BMI 1 year after IGB removal; however, the maintenance of at least 10% of the body weight loss % was associated with an improvement in metabolic syndrome. Negrin Dastis reported the maintenance of at least 10% weight loss in 24% of patients at 2.5 years post-balloon explantation [29].

The overall function and safety of the device has been demonstrated in this pilot, first-in-man study. Although one balloon leaked and one valve malfunctioned (after third adjustment), these issues have been addressed with engineering enhancements. The presence of erosive gastritis has been shown to be a contraindication, as has been the use of NSAIDs. Our subject who double-dosed NSAIDs (Piroxicam and Ibuprofen) for 2 weeks developed a perforating NSAID ulcer—determined by the principal investigator to be unrelated to the device. One case of Mallory–Weiss tear after multiple bouts of vomiting is not unusual in this clinical setting. The episodes of catheter shear have been successfully addressed by engineering enhancements and will be reported in a forthcoming publication.

The Future

The introduction of an adjustable IGB with an attached “anchor” can potentially bring endoscopic “temporary” bariatric therapy to the level of endoscopic chronic weight management.

Our study is the first step towards changing the path of IGB therapy. The options are numerous. Sequential volume additions at every weight loss plateau, interspersed with 6 week “holidays” with a partially deflated balloon (to achieve a renewed effect), are now within our grasp. Trial of balloon deflation prior to extraction can identify potential relapsers (weight regain). The elimination of the obstruction risk by the “anchor” has allowed regulatory approval of 12 month implantation times. Longer implantation times afford greater weight loss, more effective behavior modification, and improved weight loss maintenance. Further studies will begin to tackle these questions. In the meantime, the technology has arrived.

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